[0001] The invention described herein was made in the performance of work under U.S. Government
NAVY contract N00019-80-C-0017 and the U.S. Government has rights therein.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention
[0002] This invention relates to combustors used in gas turbine engines, and more particularly,
to film cooling gas turbine engine combustor liners.
Description of Related Art
[0003] Combustor liners are generally used in the combustion section of gas turbine engines
located between the compressor and turbine sections of the engine and in the exhaust
sections of afterburning aircraft gas turbine engines. Combustors generally include
an exterior casing and an interior combustor. Fuel is burned in the interior of the
combustor producing a hot gas usually at ah intensely high temperature such as 3,000°
F. or even higher. A heat shield or combustor liner is provided to prevent this intense
heat from damaging the combustion section and rest of the engine.
[0004] Some aircraft gas turbine engines, particularly ones that are capable of supersonic
flight such as military fighters and bombers, have afterburners or augmenters located
in the exhaust section of the engine. Heat shields or liners are also provided for
afterburner engines to prevent the intense combustion heat from damaging the surrounding
casing of the exhaust section or other parts of the engine and aircraft.
[0005] A more detailed discussion of the related art may be found in related U.S. Patent
Application Ser. No. 07/614,418 entitled "GAS TURBINE ENGINE MULTI-HOLE FILM COOLED
COMBUSTOR LINER AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURE", invented by Wakeman et al., filed November
15, 1990, and U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 07/614,368 entitled "COMBUSTOR LINER
WITH CIRCUMFERENTIALLY ANGLED FILM COOLING HOLES", by Napoli, filed November 15, 1990,
both applications assigned to the same assignee as in the present application. Both
of these references are incorporated herein by reference.
[0006] Engine designers have long sought to incorporate light weight easy to manufacture
combustor liners capable of withstanding the temperatures and pressure differentials
found in gas turbine engine combustors. To that end the invention described in the
Wakeman reference provides a single wall, preferably sheet metal, annular combustor
liner having multi-hole film cooling holes that are disposed through the wall of the
liner at sharp downstream angles. The multi-hole film cooling holes are essentially
cylindrical and spaced closely together to form at least one continuous pattern designed
to provide film cooling over the length of the liner. The present invention provides
multi-hole film cooling holes that are cylindrical and have a diameter of about 20
mils with a nominal tolerance of about ± 2 mils, are spaced closely together about
6 1/2 to 7 1/2 hole diameters apart, have a downstream angle of 20 degrees with a
nominal tolerance of about ± 1 degree. Axially adjacent holes are circumferentially
offset by half the angle between circumferentially adjacent holes to further enhance
the evenness of the cooling film injection points. The Wakeman reference further discloses
an embodiment wherein the liner may be corrugated so as to form a wavy wall that is
designed to prevent buckling and is particularly useful for aircraft gas turbine engine
afterburners.
[0007] A phenomenon that occurs on combustor liners both in the main combustion section
and in the afterburner combustion section is swirl, wherein swirled patterns of higher
thermal degradation areas are formed on the liner in areas where relative hot zones
exist. The patterns generally coincide with the swirl of the combustor flow induced
by swirlers in the fuel nozzles that are used to promote better combustion and in
the exhaust section by turbine nozzles. Liners subject to these uneven heating patterns
are difficult and costly to cool.
[0008] Combustor liner cooling uses a significant percentage of cooling air that is taken
from the compressor for the main combustion section and usually from the fan section
for afterburner combustor liners. This is costly air in terms of fuel and power consumption
and therefore aircraft engine designers are always seeking means for reducing the
amount of cooling air required to cool afterburner liners. Sufficient cooling air
is conventionally provided in order to cool the hottest areas caused by swirl and
some cooling air is wasted in supplying cooling air to relatively cool zones.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0009] The foregoing problems are overcome and other advantages are had by the present invention
that provides a single wall annular combustor liner having multiple superimposed preferential
patterns of multi-hole film cooling holes disposed through the liner wall so as to
provide different amounts of film cooling air to different portions of the liner as
required in order to save cooling air. In the preferred embodiment preferential cooling
patterns are based on a base pattern of cooling holes wherein each preferential pattern
is formed by skipping or blanking patterns of holes and wherein the preferential cooling
hole patterns, or blanks, may be superimposed on one another.
[0010] For the purposes of this invention superpositioning of preferential cooling hole
patterns that are based on a common base pattern presupposes hole registration such
that all holes in each pattern including the base pattern are aligned and that there
can never be more holes in a given row or more rows in a given pattern than there
are in the corresponding base pattern.
[0011] The cooling hole patterns comprise many small film cooling holes, angled sharply
downstream from the cold side to the hot side of the liner, and spaced closely together.
Film cooling holes of the present invention should be small enough to promote good
film cooling yet large enough to avoid unacceptable levels of hole clogging.
[0012] An exemplary embodiment of the present invention provides an annular combustor liner
having a base pattern of multi-hole film cooling holes having a diameter of about
20 mils, a slant angle of 20 degrees, spaced closely together about 6 1/2 to 7 1/2
hole diameters apart, and having axially adjacent rows of holes circumferentially
offset by half the angle between circumferentially adjacent holes to further enhance
the evenness of the cooling film. The base pattern may have an equal number of cooling
holes in each row or may have a generally fixed distance between the cooling holes
in each row. A first preferential cooling pattern skips every fourth row of cooling
holes in the base pattern to save cooling air. A second preferential cooling pattern
omits a plurality of circumferentially adjacent holes in every third row of the base
pattern. This pattern creates arcs extending over portions of the annular circumference
generally coinciding and aligned with cold streaks, where the absence of a portion
of a row of cooling holes lowers the amount of cooling air to that needed to cool
the cold streaks. A third preferential cooling pattern skips holes within a radius
around dilution air holes in a combustion section liner so as to prevent stress risers.
[0013] The present invention contemplates the use of different base patterns in different
axial locations along the liner as exemplified in a fourth cooling pattern at the
aft end of a combustion section liner that has an inter-row spacing twice that of
the first base pattern and an inter-hole spacing equal to that of the first base pattern
thereby providing 50% of the base flow in order to reduce the temperature profile
factor of the air entering the turbine to minimize the spanwise temperature variation
or profile.
[0014] In accordance with the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the combustor
liner may be corrugated so as to form a wavy wall that is designed to prevent buckling
and is particularly useful for outer liners in the combustion section of gas turbine
engines and may also be useful for exhaust duct burner liners in aircraft gas turbine
engines having afterburners.
ADVANTAGES
[0015] Combustor liners made in accordance with the present invention dramatically reduce
the amount of cooling air used to film cool combustor liners and reduce the axial
and circumferential temperature gradients typically found in conventional nugget or
panel film cooled combustor liners. Reduction of these gradients results in a consequent
reduction in thermal hoop stress and improved low cycle fatigue life.
[0016] Another advantage provided by the present invention is a reduction in the amount
of variation in the spanwise or radial temperature profile of the air entering the
turbine.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017] The foregoing aspects and other features of the invention are explained in the following
description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings where:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic view of a typical gas turbine engine including a core engine
combustion section and an afterburning exhaust section having combustor liners in
accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 1a is a perspective view of the core engine combustion section of the engine
depicted in FIG. 1.
FIG. 2 is a partial flat plan form view of an annular combustor liner in the core
engine combustion section of the engine depicted in FIG. 1 illustrating an exemplary
base pattern of multi-hole film cooling holes in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 2a is a portion of an annular combustor liner illustrating a first exemplary
preferential pattern of multi-hole film cooling holes wherein every fourth row of
holes in the base pattern in FIG. 2 is omitted in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 2b is a portion of an annular combustor liner illustrating a second exemplary
preferential pattern of multi-hole film cooling holes for swirl heating based on the
base pattern in FIG. 2.
FIG. 2c is a portion of an annular combustor liner illustrating an alternative to
the second exemplary preferential pattern of multi-hole film cooling holes for spiral
pattern swirl heating based on the base pattern in FIG. 2.
FIG. 2d is a portion of an annular combustor liner illustrating a third exemplary
preferential pattern of multi-hole film cooling holes wherein an area around dilution
holes is omitted in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 2e is a portion of an annular combustor liner illustrating an alternative base
pattern of multi-hole film cooling holes.
FIG. 3 is a partial flat plan form view of an annular combustor liner in the core
engine combustion section of the engine depicted in FIG. 1 having superimposed multi-hole
film cooling hole patterns in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 3a is a partial flat plan form view of an annular combustor liner having an alternative
multi-hole film cooling hole pattern for a spiral swirl pattern.
FIG. 4 is an enlarged perspective view of a portion of the combustor liner in FIG.
3 illustrating multi-hole film cooling holes.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0018] Referring to FIG. 1, a typical gas turbine engine 10 is shown comprising a fan section
12 in serial flow relationship with an engine core 13 and a by-pass duct 35 generally
disposed, in concentric fashion, about engine core 13. Flow from engine core 13 and
by-pass duct 35 is discharged to an exhaust section 22 having a nozzle 34 to help
produce thrust. A splitter 17 by-passes a portion of the air flow 27, referred to
as by-pass flow, from fan section 12 through by-pass duct 35 around engine core 13.
The remaining airflow, referred to as core air flow 25, is compressed by compressor
14 and discharged to a combustion section 16 that includes axially and circumferentially
extending outer and inner combustor liners 48 and 50, respectively. Outer and inner
combustor liners 48 and 50 respectively are radially spaced from each other to define
a portion of annular combustion flow path or combustion zone 33 therebetween where
a portion of core flow 25 is mixed with fuel and the resultant mixture is combusted.
Combustion section 16 produces hot combustion gases that are mixed with the remainder
of the compressor discharge flow and the resultant hot effluent is then flowed to
the turbine section 20 to power compressor section 14 and fan section 12.
[0019] An afterburner 24, as illustrated in FIG 1, is disposed in exhaust section 22 downstream
of turbine section 20 and is operable for burning additional fuel with bypass air
27 and core flow 25 in order to augment or produce additional thrust. Exhaust section
22 includes an annular case 26 and an annular afterburner liner 28 radially inward
of case 26, forming a cooling plenum 29 therebetween, to contain gas flow 32. Afterburners
are often referred to as augmenters.
[0020] Outer and inner combustor liners 48 and 50 and afterburner liner 28 provide some
generally similar functions. They contain the hot combustion gases and provide a flowpath
suitable to promote efficient combustion. Pressurized air enters combustion section
16 where it is mixed with fuel and burned. The hot gases of combustion, which may
in some gas turbine engines exceed 3000° F. exit combustion section 16, flow thereafter
past turbine vanes 46 and through the remaining portion of turbine section 20. The
hot gases are then expelled at a high velocity from engine 10 through exhaust nozzle
34 to provide thrust by engine 10.
[0021] Referring now to FIG. 1a, a perspective view of the combustion section 16 in FIG.
1 is depicted comprising a combustor assembly 38 positioned in the compressor discharge
flow 37 between an outer combustor casing 130 and an inner combustor casing 132 in
energized fluid supply communication with turbine section 20 denoted by turbine vanes
46. Combustor assembly 38 is further comprised of axially and circumferentially extending
outer and inner combustor liners 48 and 50, respectively, radially spaced from each
other to define a portion of annular flow path or combustion zone 33 therebetween.
Outer liner 48 and outer casing 130 form an outer combustor passage 160 therebetween
and inner liner 50 and inner casing 132 form an inner passage 161 wherein said passages
provide for receiving cool compressor discharge air. Disposed at the upstream end
of combustor liners 48 and 50 is a plurality of fuel injectors 52 mounted within a
plurality of apertures 54 in the combustor dome 31 of combustor assembly 38. Note,
that combustor assembly 38 and outer and inner combustor liners 48 and 50 have a preferred
annular configuration, extending circumferentially about the center-line of engine
10 and dome 31. Accordingly, fuel injectors 52 are circumferentially spaced from each
other to provide a number of injection points for admitting a fuel/air mixture to
combustor assembly 38 over the circumferential extent of annular combustion flow path
33.
[0022] The upstream ends of combustor liners 48 and 50 are formed with means to be attached
to, and axially and radially supported by, combustor dome 31. Downstream ends 73a
and 73b have radial support means such as interference fits or other conventional
support means that provides radial support and allows for thermal growth of liners
48 and 50.
[0023] Outer liner 48 is preferably comprised of a single wall annular sheet or shell having
generally axially extending annular corrugations 60 that provides outer liner 48 with
a wavy wall cross-section 63. Outer liner 48 has a cold side 57 in contact with the
relatively cool air outside the combustion zone 33 and a hot side 61 facing the combustion
zone and includes a means for providing preferential multi-hole film cooling of liner
48.
[0024] Means for providing preferential multi-hole film cooling are illustrated in FIG.
2, 2a, 2b, 2c, 2d, and 2e as having multiple superimposable patterns 1, 2, 3, 4, and
5 of multi-hole film cooling holes 80 disposed through the liner wall as exemplified
by outer liner 48. A base pattern 1 of multi-hole film cooling holes 80 comprises
a continuous pattern of many small cylindrical film cooling holes, angled sharply
axially downstream, and spaced closely together shown in greater detail in FIG. 4.
Film cooling holes of the present invention should be small enough to promote good
film cooling yet large enough to avoid unacceptable levels of hole clogging.
[0025] Briefly referring to FIGS. 3 and 3a, superimposed preferential multi-hole film cooling
patterns are illustrated for two alternative patterns to demonstrate the nature of
what is meant by superposition. Note that superpositioning involves the blanking or
skipping of cooling holes such that once holes are skipped or blanked they cannot
be replaced by other holes in other superimposed patterns. In other words the blanked
or skipped holes are cumulative. The present invention contemplates repeating patterns
of holes that may comprise one or more rows and is not limited to the four row repeating
pattern illustrated herein.
[0026] Referring briefly to FIG. 4, the preferred embodiment of the present invention provides
an annular combustor liner having a first base pattern 1 of multi-hole film cooling
holes 80 having a diameter D of about 20 mils, a slant angle A of about 20 degrees,
wherein the cooling holes 80 are spaced closely together. The exemplary embodiment
illustrated herein provides circumferentially adjacent cooling holes 80 having an
inter-hole spacing S about 6 1/2 to 7 1/2 hole diameters D and an inter-row spacing
P between axially adjacent rows R1 and R2 of cooling holes 80 in the same range. In
order to provide a more even circumferential distribution of cooling air, axially
adjacent rows R1 and R2 of holes 80 are circumferentially offset by about half the
angle or distance between circumferentially adjacent holes or by half the axial distance
between row R2 and the previous row R1 of cooling holes. This is done to further enhance
the evenness and effectiveness of the cooling film.
[0027] Referring again to FIG. 2a, a first preferential cooling pattern 2 skips every fourth
row R4 of cooling holes thereby yielding a cooling flow rate equal to 75% (25% reduction)
of the base cooling rate. A second preferential cooling pattern 3, shown in FIG. 2b,
omits a plurality of circumferentially adjacent holes 19 in a third row R3 of each
successive group of four rows so as to provide arcs, represented by areas H and C
within the dotted outlines, of the annular liner with different amounts of cooling
air. The area labelled H represents a hot zone that is usually caused by swirl and
therefore has more film cooling holes 80 allocated than the relatively cooler area
C. This reduction of one row again yields an approximately 25% cooling reduction that,
when superimposed with first preferential cooling pattern 2, yields an average 50%
reduction in cooling flow in the cooler area C while a 25% reduction remains in the
hotter zone H. FIG. 3 illustrates a first exemplary superimposed preferential cooling
pattern derived from base and superimposed patterns 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5.
[0028] A combustor liner subject to spiral shaped swirl patterns may use an alternative
second preferential cooling pattern 3a illustrated in FIG. 2c designed to accommodate
spiral shaped hot and cold zones Ha and Ca that, in the plan form illustration of
FIG. 3a, are skewed with respect to the axial direction. The alternative second preferential
cooling pattern 3a skips a second plurality of circumferentially adjacent holes 19a
in a third row of each successive group of four rows whereby in each row the plurality
of cooling holes 80 omitted is circumferentially rotated with respect to the preceding
plurality so as to provide a skewed, with respect to the axial direction, preferential
cooling pattern 3a as shown in the plan form illustration of FIGS. 2c and 3a. FIG.
3a illustrates a second exemplary superimposed preferential cooling pattern derived
from base and superimposed patterns 1, 2, 3a, 4, and 5.
[0029] A third preferential cooling pattern 4, shown in FIG. 2d, skips holes within a radius
around dilution air holes 78a and 78b in a combustion section liner so as to prevent
stress risers. A fourth preferential cooling pattern 5, illustrated in FIG. 2e, comprises
a second base pattern at the aft end of a combustion section liner 48 that has an
inter-row spacing twice that of the first base pattern and an inter-hole spacing equal
to that of the first base pattern thereby providing only 50% of the first base pattern
flow in order to reduce the temperature profile factor of the air entering the turbine
to minimize the spanwise temperature variation or profile. Preferential cooling patterns
4 and 5 are shown in their superimposed embodiment in FIGS. 3 and 3a to further illustrate
the feature of superposition and the preferred embodiment of the present invention.
[0030] The base pattern of holes may be determined by various methods including analytical,
empirical or a combination of the two. One exemplary combustion section liner in accordance
with one embodiment of the present invention as illustrated in FIG. 4 has a base pattern
1 comprising axially disposed circumferential rows of multi-hole cooling holes 80
having a diameter D of about 25 mils. Circumferentially adjacent holes and axially
adjacent rows of holes R1 and R2, are spaced a distance S apart about 150 mils (0.150").
Each row contains 432 equally spaced multi-hole film cooling holes 80. Therefore for
about a 7 1/2 inch long cooled portion of liner the base pattern comprises 49 rows
and a first preferential cooling hole pattern 2, which skips every fourth row, has
a pattern of 36 cooling hole rows that reduces film cooling air flow by 25% over the
base amount of cooling air flow.
[0031] Multi-hole film cooling holes 80 are nominally 0.025" in diameter and are laser drilled
from the hot side 61, at 20° to the surface, aft looking forward. The first and last
row may be drilled at slightly different angles, 30° and 26° respectively, to aid
in proper cooling flow at the liner boundaries. With a nominal wall thickness of 0.080",
the hole L/D ratio is nominally 9.4. Since all cooling holes are drilled on the basis
of 432 equally spaced holes per row, this results in reduced hole density at the larger
diameter aft end of the liner. The hole pitch/diameter (ratio of distance between
hole center-lines to hole diameters) ratio varies from 6.1 to 7.0 as hole to hole
spacing varies from 0.152" to 0.175" from forward to aft on the liner. A second preferential
hole pattern 3 provides a pattern of an equal number of adjacent holes and blanks
that is repeated 18 times around the liner, so as to coincide with the 18 fuel nozzle
swirlers of the exemplary illustration in FIGS. 1 and 2. Axially adjacent rows such
as R1 and R2 may be offset by half the distance between holes in the base pattern
to improve the evenness and hence the film cooling effectiveness of the present invention.
[0032] Note that laser and other types of hole drilling processes such as electron beam
may produce holes that are slightly frusto-conical in shape instead of perfectly cylindrical.
These slightly conical holes are conventionally regarded as cylindrical holes and
are included in any references herein to cylindrical holes.
[0033] It should be noted that smaller slant angles A may be advantageous for improved cooling
and therefore an alternative slant angle A in the range of about 20° to 15° may be
used if the associated costs are warranted. Slant holes smaller than 15 degrees may
weaken the liner structure. Further note that though exemplary illustration employs
cooling holes 80 having a diameter of 25 mils, the preferred diameter is 20 mils (.02
inches), and cooling holes 80 are preferably spaced apart from each other about 150
mils (.15 inches) off center or about seven and one half (7 1/2) hole diameters.
[0034] It may be preferable, particularly in the case of outer liners 48 and afterburner
liners 28, to provide a buckling resistance means such as corrugations 60 shown in
FIGS. 1 and 2. Buckling of outer liner 48 due to inward pressure load is a primary
design consideration. Small and medium diameter short length combustors may only require
a reasonable liner thickness combined with its formed shape and end support provided
by combustor dome 31 and stator seal to provide sufficient buckling margin. This margin
can be increased by using significant axial curvature in the liner to increase its
section modules. Very large combustor liners, having about a 30 inch diameter or larger,
such as outer liner 48 in combustion section 16 and long combustor liners such as
afterburner liner 28 may require additional features to prevent buckling. The present
invention provides cooling patterns that allow the corrugations 60 of outer liner
48 and afterburner liner 28 that restrict the liner deflection and resist buckling
to be efficiently cooled.
[0035] The buckling resistance imparted by the wave design of corrugations 60 is similar
to that applied in augmenter liners and the cooling hole patterns must be designed
to provide that the film effectiveness of the liner is not adversely affected by the
wave form. A shallow sine wave form is preferred for maintaining the integrity of
the cooling film and providing sufficient buckling resistance.
[0036] While the preferred embodiment of the present invention has been described fully
in order to explain its principles, it is understood that various modifications or
alterations may be made to the preferred embodiment without departing from the scope
of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
1. A gas turbine combustor liner having a hot side and cold side, said liner comprising:
a single wall shell having at least one preferential multi-hole film cooling hole
pattern comprising a plurality of small, cylindrical, closely spaced, sharply downstream
angled film cooling holes, angled from the cold side to the hot side.
2. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 1 wherein said one preferential
multi-hole film cooling pattern comprises a first portion of said shell containing
a first density of said cooling holes and a second portion of said shell containing
a second density of said cooling holes.
3. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 1 wherein said preferential cooling
hole pattern comprises a modification of a first base cooling hole pattern comprising
axially adjacent rows of multi-hole film cooling holes circumferentially offset from
each other by about half the distance between said multi-hole film cooling holes of
one of said rows.
4. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 3 wherein a first preferential cooling
pattern comprises a pattern that omits at least one row of holes in said first base
cooling hole pattern in an axially repetitive pattern.
5. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 3 wherein a first preferential cooling
pattern comprises a pattern that omits a plurality of circumferentially adjacent cooling
holes in a plurality of rows in said first base cooling hole pattern in an axially
repetitive pattern.
6. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 5 wherein said first preferential
cooling pattern of omitted cooling holes corresponds to a swirl pattern of the combustor.
7. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 4 further comprising a second preferential
cooling pattern that omits a plurality of pluralities of circumferentially adjacent
cooling holes in a plurality of rows in an axially repetitive pattern wherein said
second preferential cooling pattern is superimposed on said first preferential cooling
pattern.
8. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 7 wherein said second preferential
cooling pattern of omitted cooling holes corresponds to a swirl pattern of the combustor.
9. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 8 further comprising a third preferential
cooling pattern of said cooling holes comprising a second base cooling hole pattern
on the aft end of said liner for reducing the spanwise turbine entrance air temperature
profile factor.
10. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 9 wherein said third preferential
cooling pattern includes an inter-row spacing twice that of said first base pattern
and an inter-hole spacing equal to that of said first base pattern and axially adjacent
rows of multi-hole film cooling holes are circumferentially offset from each other
by about half the distance between said multi-hole film cooling holes of one of said
rows.
11. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 8 including a fourth preferential
cooling pattern comprising an area of skipped cooling holes in said first and second
base cooling hole patterns around dilution holes in said liner for preventing formation
of stress risers around the dilution holes.
12. A gas turbine combustor liner having a hot side and cold side, said liner comprising:
a single wall shell having a plurality of superimposed preferential multi-hole
film cooling hole patterns wherein said preferential cooling hole patterns are derived
from a first base multi-hole film cooling hole pattern comprising a plurality of small
closely spaced sharply downstream angled cylindrical film cooling holes.
13. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 12 wherein a said first base pattern
includes axially adjacent rows of multi-hole film cooling holes in which the holes
of adjacent rows are circumferentially offset from each other by about half the distance
between said multi-hole film cooling holes of one of said rows.
14. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 13 comprising:
a first preferential cooling pattern comprising one omitted row of holes in said
first base pattern in a first axially repetitive pattern,
a second preferential cooling pattern comprising a plurality of omitted rows of
circumferentially adjacent cooling holes in a plurality of rows of said base pattern
in a second axially repetitive pattern.
15. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 14 wherein said multi-hole cooling
holes have a diameter of about 20 mils and have a center-to-center spacing in the
range of 6 to 7 1/2 cooling hole diameters and said base pattern comprises rows of
said cooling holes having an inter-row spacing in the range of 6 to 7 1/2 cooling
hole diameters.
16. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 15 wherein said first base pattern
comprises axially repetitive sets of four adjacent rows of cooling holes and said
first preferential cooling hole pattern comprises a pattern in which a fourth row
in said sets of rows is omitted and said second preferential cooling hole pattern
comprises a pattern in which a plurality of circumferentially adjacent cooling holes
in a third row of said set of cooling holes is omitted.
17. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 14 wherein said multi-hole cooling
holes have a diameter of about 25 mils and have a center-to-center spacing in the
range of 6 to 7 cooling hole diameters and said base pattern comprises rows of said
cooling holes having an inter-row spacing of about 6 cooling hole diameters and having
an equal number of cooling holes in each row.
18. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 16 wherein at least a portion of
said shell is corrugated to form a shallow wavy wall cross-section.
19. A gas turbine combustion section as claimed in Claim 16 wherein said film cooling
holes have a slant angle slanted downstream from the cold surface of said liner to
the hot surface of said liner of about twenty degrees.
20. A gas turbine combustor liner as claimed in Claim 19 wherein said third preferential
cooling pattern based on a second base pattern including an inter-row spacing twice
that of said first base pattern and an inter-hole spacing equal to that of said first
base pattern and axially adjacent rows of multi-hole film cooling holes are circumferentially
offset from each other by about half the distance between said multi-hole film cooling
holes of one of said rows.